Vietnam emerging as attractive destination for foreign property investors
20/3/18
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Vietnam has emerged as a favored destination for foreign investors looking to the property market. |
Property prices in Vietnam are among the best value in Southeast Asia.
Vietnam has
emerged as a favored destination among foreign firms looking to invest in
property, with prices standing at among the best value in Southeast
Asia.
Last year, Japanese investors Nishi Nippon Railroad and Hankyu
Realty hooked up with a local property firm to develop a residential project
with total investment of $350 million in Ho
Chi Minh City. Half of the funding came from the two
Japanese firms, while the rest was put up by their local partner.
Japan’s
Mitsubishi Corp. has also diversified its portfolio in Vietnam by buying into a property development
project in Hanoi,
which has total investment of $1.9 billion.
The company signed a partnership deal with Vietnam’s
Bitexco Group after acquiring a 45 percent stake in the first phase of the
former’s The Manor Central Park project in Hoang Mai District. Bitexco holds
the remaining 55 percent.
This foreign interest has been attributed to high property
prices in their home markets, which makes them less attractive to investors,
while prices in Vietnam
are still low but rising rapidly.
Luxury flat prices in cities like Hanoi
have been trending upwards since 2015 but have yet to catch up with other
vibrant economic hubs in Southeast Asia, South
China Morning Post quoted Kingston Lai, founder and chief executive of the
Asia Banker’s Club, as saying.
Luxury flat prices in Hanoi
were up 50 percent in the 10 year period to 2016, while mid-market flats were
up 80 percent during the same period, Lai quoted figures from real estate firm
CBRE as saying.
“Today, quality residences in Hanoi’s
city center, on average, are sold at only around HK$1,500 ($191.32) per square
foot (100 square feet = 9.3 square meters), half of Bangkok’s level,” Lai said.
“Prices of high-quality housing will catch up with neighboring
cities amid the gradual completion of infrastructure such as railways and
airport expansion, and as more foreign corporations bring investments to the
market,” Lai added.
There are many other factors driving foreign investment in Vietnam’s real estate market including its
fast-growing economy, rapid urbanization and expanding middle-class, which is
growing at the fastest pace in Southeast Asia,
according to HSBC.
The bank projects Vietnam's middle class will jump
from 12 million people in 2012 to 33 million by 2020.
A loosening of restrictions in the country's regulatory
environment has also helped boost sales.
Last year, Vietnam
eased restrictions on foreign property ownership to improve market liquidity.
The amended law went into effect in July of last year and
allowed foreign investment funds, foreigners with valid visas, international
firms with operations in Vietnam
and overseas Vietnamese to buy residential properties.
The Vietnam Real Estate Association (VNREA) has forecast a
promising outlook for the local real estate market as demand from foreign
buyers drives market growth.
The number of foreigners living in the country has reached
320,000, according to the property association.
Investors with business interests in Vietnam are the most likely to buy
local properties because they are attracted by potential returns of between
seven and eight percent here, according to the VNREA.
Bright prospects
Neil MacGregor, managing director of property firm Savills Vietnam, said Savills expects to see a
considerable amount of inbound investment into real estate in 2018, with strong
interest from Japan, Korea, Singapore
and increasingly China.
He said that existing free trade agreements and the ongoing
discussions regarding the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
(RCEP), involving China,
are all important drivers for continued investment.
“We have seen that trade with countries such as Japan and Korea typically comes together with
FDI, importantly fueling investment into infrastructure and real estate,” he
added.
Vietnam’s
actual foreign direct investment reached an estimated $17 billion in 2017, the
highest annual amount ever recorded by the country, according to the Foreign
Investment Agency.
South Korea
was the country’s biggest investor out of more than 100 countries and
territories, with registered capital worth $57.5 billion, followed by Japan and Singapore.
Sharing MacGregor's opinion, Lai said: “Apple, Samsung and
Microsoft have set up major plants near Hanoi,
with Samsung contributing 22.7 per cent to the country’s exports in 2016. Their
employees are target renters for overseas investors.”
However, it remains challenging for foreign investors to
identify quality real estate investments with clear ownership, and transactions
involving operating assets will remain scarce, said Neil.
Foreign investors pledged to invest $312.1 million in Vietnam’s real
estate sector in the first two months of this year, according to the Foreign
Investment Agency.
The sum represented 9.3 percent of pledged foreign direct
investment in the country in January and February.
All comments [ 5 ]
Vietnam is becoming the richest country in South East Asia
Many foreign investor are planning to pour money into Vietnam economy.
Vietnam is improving its economic environment to attract more and more foreign investors
Vietnam has emerged as a favored destination among foreign firms
Vietnam's middle class will jump from 12 million people in 2012 to 33 million by 2020.
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